-
Beyonce declared a billionaire by Forbes magazine
-
Precious metals slump as stocks near end of banner 2025
-
El Kaabi brace helps Morocco reach AFCON last 16 as group winners
-
Trump, Netanyahu meet in Florida to discuss Gaza, Iran
-
Meat-loving Argentines shun beef as inflation bites
-
Barcelona's Araujo returns to training after weeks out
-
Nancy promises no let-up even if Celtic go top of Premiership
-
Appollis penalty sends South Africa past Zimbabwe and into AFCON last-16
-
George Clooney, his wife Amal and children become French
-
Russia says Ukraine attacked Putin's home, Kyiv calls this 'lie'
-
World stocks sluggish as precious metals drop
-
Brigitte Bardot's funeral to be held next week in Saint-Tropez
-
Tehran shopkeepers shut stores over economic conditions
-
Media on Bardot: France's biggest 'sex symbol' or 'crazy cat lady'
-
Maresca says Chelsea must 'understand why' they keep squandering leads
-
Debris hit Nigerian hotel, wounded staff, after US strikes: owner
-
New year, new mayor for New York City
-
World stocks mark time as precious metals drop
-
Man Utd boss Amorim says now is the time to change formation
-
Arsenal boss Arteta will 'actively look' at January signings amid injury crisis
-
Brigitte Bardot to be buried in Saint-Tropez cemetery
-
Ex-heavyweight champion Joshua injured in Nigeria highway crash
-
Uganda, Tanzania measure progress to be made before hosting 2027 AFCON
-
Spurs rising star Gray eager to keep learning after first senior goal
-
US offered Kyiv 15 years of security guarantees, Zelensky says
-
Stocks mixed, as precious metals drop
-
India's navy sails back to the future with historic voyage
-
Puel back as Nice manager after Haise exits
-
Myanmar pro-military party claims huge lead in junta-run poll
-
Dazzling Dupont brings France cheer heading into new year
-
Emirates mining company challenges Guinea licence withdrawal
-
Netanyahu to meet Trump in Florida for talks on Gaza, Iran
-
Thai army accuses Cambodia of violating truce with over 250 drones
-
Myanmar pro-military party claims huge win in first phase of junta-run poll
-
ICC rates MCG pitch 'unsatisfactory' after two-day Test
-
Stocks mixed, precious metals slip in quiet trade
-
Myanmar pro-military party official says 'winning' junta-run poll
-
Russia reopens theatre devastated by siege of Mariupol
-
Wawrinka 'at peace' with retirement but no plans to go quietly
-
Stocks mixed, precious metals slip in quiet Asian trade
-
New year brings new mayor for New York City
-
Netanyahu to meet Trump in Florida for crucial Gaza talks
-
NBA-best Thunder end skid while Kawhi hits career-high 55
-
China launches military drills simulating blockade of Taiwan ports
-
Steelers, Panthers lose to set up NFL showdowns for playoff berths
-
Myanmar pro-military party 'winning' junta-run poll first phase: source
-
Bondi victims' families demand national probe into antisemitism
-
Sudanese trek through mountains to escape Kordofan fighting
-
Australia coach McDonald backs under-fire MCG curator
-
South Korea's ex-first lady accused of taking over $200,000 in bribes
'Accept me': Near Ukraine front, a haven for outcasts
Whenever warm days come to Kramatorsk, near the eastern Ukrainian front, the Svitanok organisation leaves its door wide open, offering advice or a cup of tea to the city's social outcasts.
People living with HIV, those recovering from drug addiction, sex workers -- all are welcome to seek medical guidance and respite from stigma and solace as Russian troops advance toward Kramatorsk.
The refuge they find at Svitanok is vital during the war, when marginalised communities often feel left behind and face heightened insecurity and stigma.
"They support me here, they respect me. I just came to drink some tea. They'll treat me, I know they'll accept me," says Oleg Makaria, who is HIV-positive.
Makaria, who comes to Svitanok most days, hardly reacts to the air raid sirens once again wailing in Kramatorsk, just 20 kilometres (12 miles) from the front.
The 41-year-old jokes that he does not look his age. But he suddenly breaks down thinking about Donetsk, his home city now in Russian hands.
"I understand I can't return to Donetsk anymore. Never in my life. Probably... I'm here alone," he mutters through tears.
Moscow-backed separatists seized parts of the Donetsk region in 2014, a prelude to the Kremlin's full-scale 2022 invasion, which the UNHCR says has displaced nearly 11 million people.
The conflict disrupted treatment -- which needs to be taken daily to control HIV -- to some of the 250,000 Ukrainians estimated by UNAIDS to be living with the infection in 2020.
- 'I didn't break' -
Advances from Russian troops have also threatened drug treatment programmes.
Moscow and its proxies have banned opioid substitution, which replaces dangerous opioids with less harmful substances such as methadone.
Approved by the United Nations and the World Health Organisation, the treatment also reduces HIV transmission as it lowers drug injections.
No one would guess looking at Natalia Zelenina, but the bright social worker sporting a red bob and bright pink lipstick spent five years in Russian custody.
She was carrying legally prescribed drugs for her replacement therapy when she was stopped by Moscow-backed separatists controlling parts of the Donetsk region in 2017.
"I realised how strong I was," the 52-year-old said.
While her colleagues campaigned to get her out, she fought to obtain treatment for her HIV.
"I survived, I endured it all. I went through it all. I didn't break," she said.
After being released to Kyiv-controlled territory in a prisoner exchange, Zelenina returned to Svitanok.
"I knew that I could only recover in a familiar atmosphere," she says.
But even in the protective bubble of Svitanok, where most workers have HIV and a drug dependency, the boom of explosions can be heard in the distance.
One employee told AFP she started consuming "just a little bit" of drugs to alleviate her anxiety –- until her colleagues helped her get clean again.
Iryna Mamalakieva arrives holding her four-year-old son Maksym, who wobbled off at any opportunity to pick dandelions on a patch of grass.
The unemployed 31-year-old former mine operator, diagnosed with HIV in 2019, relies on Svitanok for medical and legal help.
"Some people give up, some hang themselves. I knew people like that: They found out about their diagnosis, and even if they had children, they drank themselves to death and quietly went to hang themselves," she said.
- 'Melancholy in my soul' -
The war has exacerbated stigma towards HIV-positive people and those suffering from drug addictions, counsellor Svitlana Andreieva told AFP.
"The rest of the world that's outside our doors, it tells them that they are nobody, that they're not accepted, they're not respected," she said.
Andreieva herself remembers being kicked out of hospitals and beaten up by the police because she was addicted to drugs and HIV-positive.
Then she learned law, which she shares with visitors who went through similar experiences.
"The next time they don't come with tears," she said. "They say: 'What do I need to do, which law article should I rely on?'"
But Andreieva's patience is often tested.
After an altercation with a regular, she finds a bouquet of lilacs in lieu of apologies in the office.
Hard to win over, she initially shrugs it off.
But Svitanok's workers and beneficiaries face yet another hurdle: cuts in US humanitarian aid.
Svitanok has for now survived Washington's aid freeze, but is scrambling to find alternative sources of funding for some of its many programmes, which partly rely on US money.
The uncertainty "really knocked me out of my stability", Zelenina says.
"There's such a melancholy in my soul, you know? I love my job. I simply can't imagine what I will do tomorrow."
Ch.P.Lewis--AT